Study Guide: Logic and Contemporary Rhetoric
Study Guide: Logic and Contemporary Rhetoric
Study Guide: Logic and Contemporary Rhetoric
STUDY GUIDE
CHAPTER 1
GOOD AND BAD REASONING
I.
II.
III.
Chapter Summary
In this Chapter the authors note that reasoning is the essential ingredient in problem
solving, and that since this is so we need to know how to distinguish good, cogent,
reasoning from bad, fallacious, reasoning. They begin their discussion of this by outlining
the structure of an argument, noting that all arguments have premises and a conclusion,
and distinguishing arguments from exposition.
They then distinguish between cogent and fallacious reasoning, noting that we
reason cogently when our premises are believable, we consider all likely relevant
information, and our reasoning is valid. Here, they distinguish between two basic kinds of
valid arguments; those that are deductively valid, and those that are inductively valid.
They then outline some common mistakes about cogent reasoning, such that what counts
as good reasoning is culturally relative, or individually relative.
Returning to their discussion of cogent reasoning the authors note that whether
ones premises are believable, and whether one is using all relevant information, will
depend upon ones background beliefs. These beliefs can pertain to matters of fact, and
beliefs about values. They can also be divided into those that are true and those that are
false; they also differ in how firmly they should be held. The most deeply ingrained of a
persons background beliefs tend to be those that constitute her worldview or her
philosophy. We need to make sure that these beliefs are well-grounded, and so we need to
examine them, as well as our other background beliefs. Of these, two kinds are especially
important; those that concern the nature of human nature, and those that concern the
reliability of information sources. We should recognize that the most accurate information
that we have comes from the well-established sciences of physics, chemistry, and biology,
as well as to a lesser extent psychology.
IV.
Practice Questions
A. Objective Multiple Choice
1. The essential ingredient in problem-solving is
a.
b.
c.
d.
Information
Reasoning
Values
Knowledge
Form
Conclusion
Premise
Value
3. An argument
a. Will only have two premises
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Fallacious one
Valid one
Inductive one
Deductive one
9. Validity concerns
a.
b.
c.
d.
The connection between the premises and the readers background beliefs
The connection between the premises and the conclusion of the argument
The truth of the premises
The truth of the conclusion
That if all of its premises are true, then its conclusion must be true also
That if its conclusion is true, then its premises must be true
That if all of its premises are true, then its conclusion is likely to be true
That if all of its premises are false, then its conclusion is likely to be false
Culturally relative
Gender relative
Individually relative
Not relative
13. Ignorance is
a.
b.
c.
d.
Bliss
Not bliss
Necessary to evaluate arguments
Included in our background beliefs
Worldview, or philosophy
Worldview, but not philosophy
Philosophy, but not worldview
Value system
17. Two kinds of background beliefs that are extremely important concern
a.
b.
c.
d.
Well-established religion
Well-established science
Personal intuition
Personal judgments
B. True/False
1. Bad reasoning is fallacious reasoning
2. Valid deductive arguments always have true conclusions
3. Invalid deductive arguments can have true conclusions
http://www.iep.utm.edu/
Wikipedia; Logic entry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logic
Factasia Logic
http://www.rbjones.com/rbjpub/logic/
VI.
Answer Key
A. Objective Multiple Choice
1. b
2. b
3. c
4. a
5. a
6. a
7. a
8. d
9. b
10. a
11. c
12. d
13. b
14. c
15. a
16. a
17. c
18. a
19. b
20. a
B. True/False
1. F
2. F
3. T
4. F
5. T
6. F
7. F
8. T
9
9. T
10. F
11. F
12. F
13. F
14. F
15. T
C. Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. alter students political views
2. premises
3. thus, therefore, consequently
4. premises
5. aimless
6. expository
7. form
8. in many different ways
9. consistency, believability
10. science
CHAPTER 2
MORE ON DEDUCTION AND INDUCTION
10
I.
II.
Particular negative
Predicate class
Proof
Reductio ad absurdum
Statistical induction
Structure
Subject class
Syllogisms
Tautology
Thesis
Universal affirmative
Universal negative
III.
Chapter Summary
In this Chapter the authors outline various different forms of argument, including modus
tollens, modus ponens, hypothetical syllogism, and disjunctive syllogism. They then
outline the concepts of validity and invalidity, and outline the fallacies of denying the
antecedent and affirming the consequent. They then discuss further traditional syllogistic
logic, noting that categorical propositions assert or deny relationships between a subject
class and a predicate class; these assertions or denials give rise to four kinds of
categorical propositions. Having discussed syllogistic logic the authors then discuss
indirect reasoning, and then the definitions of tautologies, contradictions, and contingent
statements, offering examples of each.
The authors then move from deductive logic to discuss inductive validity and
invalidity. Here, they outline various types of induction, including induction by
enumeration, reasoning by analogy, statistical induction, higher-level inductions,
reasoning to causal connections, and concatenated inductions. They then note that it is not
true that in deductive reasoning we go from the general to the particular, while in
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inductive reasoning we go from the particular to the general. They then discuss the
difference between reasoning cogently and being right in fact.
IV.
Practice Questions
A. Objective Multiple Choice
1. If A, then B. A. Therefore B is an example of the argument form
a.
b.
c.
d.
Modus ponens
Modus tollens
Hypothetical syllogism
Disjunctive syllogism
Modus ponens
Modus tollens
Hypothetical syllogism
Disjunctive syllogism
Modus ponens
Modus tollens
Hypothetical syllogism
Disjunctive syllogism
Modus ponens
Modus tollens
Hypothetical syllogism
Disjunctive syllogism
a.
b.
c.
d.
7. A categorical proposition is
a.
b.
c.
d.
An unconditional offer
A subject-predicate proposition
A syllogistic proposition
A conditional offer
Major term
Minor term
Middle term
Propositional term
Major term
Minor term
Middle term
Propositional term
10. The term that occurs in each premise but not in the conclusion is the
syllogisms
a.
b.
c.
d.
Major term
Minor term
Middle term
Propositional term
12. No S are P is a
a. Universal affirmative proposition
b. Universal negative proposition
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A proposition
E proposition
I proposition
O proposition
A proposition
E proposition
I proposition
O proposition
A proposition
E proposition
I proposition
O proposition
A proposition
E proposition
I proposition
O proposition
a.
b.
c.
d.
20. Either you will pass this class or you wont pass this class is an example of
a.
b.
c.
d.
A tautology
A contradiction
A contingent statement
A false statement
B. True/False
1. In induction by enumeration, we reason from the fact that all As observed so far
have been Bs to the conclusion that all are Bs.
2. In induction by enumeration, a greater sample size yields lower probability.
3. More than one counterexample is needed to shoot down induction by
enumeration.
4. Higher-level inductions are used to evaluate those that are more general.
5. Statistical induction is a weak form of induction.
6. Concatenated reasoning joins together inductions and deductions to find a pattern.
7. If you reason correctly you will always get a true conclusion.
8. If you have a true conclusion you will have reasoned correctly.
9. Deductively valid reasoning progresses from the general to the particular.
10. It is not the case that inductively valid reasoning goes from the particular to the
general.
11. No As are Bs is a universal negative statement.
12. Some Ps are Qs is a universal affirmative statement.
13. Denying the antecedent is a fallacy.
14. If A, then B. B. Therefore, A is an example of modus tollens.
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V.
Answer Key
A. Objective Multiple Choice
1. a
2. b
3. c
4. d
5. a
6. b
7. b
8. a
9. b
10. c
11. c
12. b
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13. a
14. d
15. a
16. b
17. b
18. d
19. d
20. a
B. True/False
1.T
2. F
3. F
4. F
5. F
6. T
7. F
8. F
9. F
10. T
11. T
12. F
13. T
14. F
15. T
C. Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Deductively invalid
2. If A, then B, B, therefore A
3. syllogism
4. subject/predicate
5. universal negative
6. three
7. reductio ad absurdum
8. contingent
9. relevant
10. false
CHAPTER 3
FALLACIOUS REASONING1
19
I.
II.
III.
Chapter Summary
After noting that, to be precise, rather than calling an argument itself fallacious we
should say that people are guilty of fallacious reasoning, the authors turn to outline
various ways in which such reasoning could occur.
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21
which occurs when we reason to a conclusion in the belief that it has only one
alternative, which is bad.
The authors then discuss the fallacy of begging the question, which occurs when
we assume the truth of what we are trying to prove. They note that one way to beg the
question at issue is simply to avoid it entirely, which makes one guilty of evading the
issue. The last three types of fallacies they discuss are that of the questionable
premise, suppressed evidence, and tokenism.
IV.
Practice Questions
A. Objective Multiple Choice
1. Accepting the word of an authority when we shouldnt is the fallacy of
a.
b.
c.
d.
Appeal to authority
Equivocation
Organizational authority
Affirming the consequent
2. Authorities are
a. Equally reliable
b. Experts on all issues
c. Not created equal
d. Not well-trained
3. When a celebrity endorses a product, this proves
a.
b.
c.
d.
They like it
They use it a lot
It is of high quality
Nothing about the product
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Logicians
Doctors
Students
Politicians
6. When we argue one way at one time and another way at another time we
could be
a.
b.
c.
d.
Inconsistent
Authoritative
Straw men
Begging the question
Logical consistency
Political consistency
Consistency in the face of countervailing evidence
Consistency in the face of danger
Suppressed evidence
False evidence
Begging the question
Questionable character
To plead
To avoid
To assume
To assert
Lying
Evading the issue
Uninformed
Begging the question
Questionable conclusion
Questionable statement
Questionable question
Questionable answer
Overlooked evidence
Hidden evidence
Oppressed evidence
False evidence
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17. If a person is satisfied with campaign rhetoric when there is little likelihood of
the promises made being kept she is a victim of
a.
b.
c.
d.
Theft
Tokenism
Argument from authority
Straw man fallacy
19. When one talks out of both sides of ones mouth one might be engaged in
a.
b.
c.
d.
Must be true
Must be false
Must be believable
Must be implausible
B. True/False
1. Politicians always intentionally mislead people.
2. There are three master categories into which each fallacy can be made to fit.
3. We all have to appeal to an expert at some times, unless we are fools.
4. Some authorities are more trustworthy than others.
5. Buying Nike products because Tiger Woods advertises them is an example of
straw man reasoning.
6. Age does not preclude gullibility.
7. It is worth the effort to resist being intimidated by professional jargon.
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8. Labels such as conservative or liberal are worthless because they are too
vague.
9. When a politician promises an increase in government services, a reduction in
taxation, and a reduction in the national debt they are being evasive.
10. When a cigarette smoker advocates a ban on heroin because it is harmful but
against a ban on cigarettes they are being inconsistent.
11. When we provide reasons to excuse our behavior to ourselves, we are being
inconsistent.
12. A hypocrite pretends to believe what he does not in fact believe, or to be what
he is in fact not.
13. A straw man fallacy is an example of a fallacy of suppressed evidence.
14. Either P or Q. Not P. Therefore, Q is an example of the either-or-fallacy.
15. You are either with us or against us in the fight against terror is an example
of the straw man fallacy.
C. Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. False dilemmas usually are a species of the genus _________ .
2. Stating that flying fish fly because they are flying fish is an example of
______ .
3. When there is no evidence for or against a conclusion, reason requires that we
_________ .
4. The plan offered by both Hilary Clinton and John McCain to suspect a tax on
gasoline for the summer travel season is an example of _____ .
5. We need to note when there is inconsistency between what a person says and
what he does, although this is not, strictly speaking, a _____ .
6. We can show a dilemma to be false, either by _____ or by _____ .
7. We can beg the question by ____ the issue.
8. We reason _____ when we fail to satisfy the three requirements of cogent
reasoning.
9. Statements can imply ______.
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10. Being careful when evaluating sources of information does not mean we have
to be ____ .
D. Essay questions
1. Why could it be said that all deductively valid arguments beg the question? Is
this a problem for them? Explain your answer fully, illustrating it with
examples of arguments.
2. How could self-interest affect reasoning (a) positively, and (b) negatively?
Explain your answers fully, giving examples of both its positive and negative
effects.
3. Sometimes when we are inconsistent we might try to deceive ourselves so that
we do not realize this. But this is puzzling, since for this to occur we must
already know the facts that we are trying deceptively to conceal from
ourselves. How do you think self-deception is possible?
4. Why do you think that politicians get away with making inconsistent claims or
arguments? Outline the various ways in which we might explain this. Which
do you think is the most plausible, and why?
5. Outline the ways in which organizational inconsistency might occur. How
might we try to combat such attempts to fool gullible people by fallacious
reasoning?
V.
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Answer Key
A. Objective Multiple Choice
1. a
2. c
3. d
4. b
5. d
6. a
7. c
8. d
9. a
10. a
11. c
12. b
13. b
14. b
15. a
16. a
17. b
18. c
19. c
20. b
B. True/False
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
F
T
T
T
F
T
T
F
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9. F
10. T
11. T
12. T
13. T
14. T
15. F
C. Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Questionable premise
2. Begging the question
3. Withhold judgment
4. Tokenism
5. Fallacy
6. Going between its horns/grasping its horns
7. Evading
8. Fallaciously
9. Arguments
10. Cynical
CHAPTER 4
FALLACIOUS REASONING2
I.
III.
Chapter Summary
This Chapter provides a discussion of further types of fallacious reasoning. The
authors begin with discussing ad hominem arguments, noting that attacks on persons
characters or credentials are sometimes relevant. They then consider the variant of
this fallacy known as guilt by association, noting that it could be rational to judge
someone in this way, up to a point. They then discuss the fallacy of two wrongs
make a right, noting that this fallacy is made plausible by its similarity to a more
30
legitimate way of reasoning, known as fighting fire with fire, and by the fact that it
could be used by someone to imply that their opponents are being hypocritical. They
then discuss the fallacies of common practice and traditional wisdom.
The third type of fallacy that the authors consider in this Chapter is that of
irrelevant reason, or non sequitur, while the fourth is the fallacy of equivocation. The
authors note that ambiguity can often serve useful purposes. The next four fallacies
that they consider are the appeal to ignorance fallacy, the fallacies of composition and
division, and the slippery slope fallacy.
IV.
Practice Questions
A. Objective Multiple Choice
1. The type of fallacy that is to the person is the
a.
b.
c.
d.
Never
Always
Sometimes
Only when it is to their detriment
Tu quoque fallacy
Ad hominem fallacy
Straw man fallacy
Composition fallacy
7. According to retributivists
a.
b.
c.
d.
10. The fallacy of justifying an action on the grounds that it is an accepted way of
doing things is the fallacy of
a.
b.
c.
d.
Common practice
Composition
Division
Traditional wisdom
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Composition
Division
Irrelevant Reason
Straw man
Irrelevance
Irrationality
Argumentativeness
Deception
15. When a term is used in an argument to mean one thing in one place and
another thing in another place, it is used
a.
b.
c.
d.
Equivocally
Sinfully
Bilaterally
Unilaterally
17. Taking the absence of evidence of P to show that not-P is true is an example of
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a.
b.
c.
d.
19. If I assume that my monthly payments for a car are low, the total cost will be
low, also, I am guilty of
a.
b.
c.
d.
20. The fallacy that is the mirror image of the fallacy of the salesmans fallacy is
a.
b.
c.
d.
B. True/False
1. Attacks on a persons character are never relevant.
2. It is never rational to judge people by the company they keep.
3. That a man is frequently seen around prostitutes proves that he is immoral.
4. In the 1996 Presidential election over 15,000 ballots were invalidated because
the voters voted for two candidates for the same office, and so it does not
matter that in 2000 1,900 ballots were invalidated for the same reason.
5. Justifying retaliation in sports is an example of the two wrongs make a right
fallacy.
6. Killing in self-defense illustrates the claim that two wrongs do not make a
right.
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D. Essay Questions
1. In what ways can ambiguity be useful? Explain your answer, and illustrate it
with examples. Is logical reasoning the only way to convey ideas? Discuss in
the light of your answer to the first part of this question.
2. In what sense is the relevance of reasons dependent upon the circumstances in
which they are offered? Explain and illustrate your answer.
3. Why is it important to recognize that politicians often use fallacious
reasoning? In answering this question, draw upon some examples of fallacious
reasoning used by politicians that are not given in this textbook.
4. Is tradition useful in any way? Explain your answer, drawing upon the
quotation from W. Somerset Maugham given in the text, as well as in light of
the discussion of the fallacy of traditional wisdom.
5. Outline the fallacy of two wrongs make a right, and compare and contrast it
with similar forms of reasoning that might be more legitimate than it.
V.
Equivocation
http://www.drury.edu/ess/Logic/Informal/Equivocation.html
VI.
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. b
2. b
3. c
4. a
5. a
6. a
7. b
8. b
9. d
10. d
11. c
12. c
13. a
14. d
15. a
16. a
17. a
18. a
19. c
20. a
B.True/False
1. F
2. F
3. F
4. F
5. T
6. F
7. F
8. F
9. T
10. F
11. F
12. F
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13. F
14. T
15. F
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Sometimes
2. Assessing
3. Certitude
4. Two wrongs make a right
5. Fighting fire with fire
6. Common practice
7. Risks
8. Non sequitur
9. Appeal to ignorance
10. Fallacy of division
CHAPTER 5
FALLACIOUS REASONING3
I.
Hasty Conclusion
Small Sample
Unrepresentative Sample
Questionable Cause
Questionable Analogy
Questionable Statistics
Questionable Uses of Good Statistics
Polls: An Important Special Case
False Charge of Fallacy
Quibbling
38
Summary of Chapter 5
II.
III.
Chapter Summary
In this Chapter the authors continue their discussion of fallacious reasoning with
discussions of several fallacies that generally fall into the category of invalid
inferences.
The first fallacy that they discuss is that of hasty conclusion, which occurs when
we draw a conclusion from relevant but insufficient evidence. A variety of this fallacy
is the fallacy of the small sample. In addition to needing a sufficiently large sample to
justify drawing a conclusion from it, the authors note that it must also be
representative of the population from which it is drawn; not to do so is to commit the
fallacy of the unrepresentative sample.
The authors note that we commit the fallacy of questionable cause when we hold
something to be the cause of something else on the basis of insufficient or
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Practice Questions
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. When we draw a conclusion from relevant but insufficient evidence we commit
40
a.
b.
c.
d.
Small
Representative
Unrepresentative
Biased
Good education
Good intentions
Good background information
Good expression
b. Self-interest
c. Sample bias
d. Bad statistics
8. The view that vaccinations are the cause of autism is an example of
a.
b.
c.
d.
10. When we reason that the 2008 Olympic Games will be fun to watch as they were
in the past, we reason by
a.
b.
c.
d.
Analogy
Statistics
Intuition
Emotion
Statistical analogy
Biased analogy
Argumentative analogy
Explanatory analogy
Authoritative
Confusing
Flawed
Biased
Bias
Prevalence
Margin of error
Authority
42
Attempts to mislead
The truth of the matter
Approximations
Appropriations
15. According to the authors, that many people are unable to understand the
significance of a statistic is one reason why
a.
b.
c.
d.
Good poll
Unbiased poll
Poll fallacy
Poll prediction
17. Those who falsely accuse others of fallacious reasoning are guilty of
a.
b.
c.
d.
Intellectual dishonesty
Character assassination
False charge of fallacy
Fallacious reasoning
Jus ad bellum
Argumentum ad absurdum
Jus in bello
Argumentum ad baculum
43
a. Quibbling
b. Hasty conclusion
c. Questionable statistics
d. Analogous reasoning
B.True/False
1. The fallacy of the small sample is an example of the fallacy of hasty
conclusion.
2. A good sample should be representative of the population from which it is
drawn.
3. The name the fallacy of biased statistics is only given to the fallacy of the
unrepresentative sample.
4. We should always trust statistics.
5. Higher-level theories are exempt from refutation.
6. We should believe in ESP.
7. American presidents can control the American economy.
8. Government policies have no effect on their countrys economy.
9. Analogical reasoning can be fallacious in several ways.
10. Questionable analogies surface in courts of law.
11. Statistics on corrupt activities are easy to come by.
12. Statistics based on soft information are never questionable.
13. Statistics on the gross national product represent all of the economic activity
in a country.
14. Good statistics are always reliable.
15. Statistics are misused in economics and medicine.
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. The fallacy of the hasty conclusion falls into the broad category of ______ .
44
45
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. a
2. a
3. b
4. b
5. c
6. d
7. c
8. a
9. a
10. a
46
11. c
12. a
13. c
14. c
15. c
16. c
17. c
18. d
19. c
20. a
B.True/False
1. T
2. T
3. F
4. F
5. F
6. F
7. F
8. F
9. T
10. T
11. F
12. F
13. F
14. F
15. T
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Invalid inference
2. Unrepresentative, population
3. Hasty conclusion, small sample
4. Post hoc, ergo propter hoc
5. Short run
6. Ethnic
7. Reason by analogy
8. Induction by enumeration
9. Polls
10. Hasty conclusion, questionable statistics
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CHAPTER 6
PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPEDIMENTS TO COGENT REASONING: SHOOTING
OURSELVES IN THE FOOT
I.
II.
Culture lag
Delusion
Denial
Extrasensory perception
Generalized anxiety
48
Hard sciences
Herd instinct
Jihad
Loyalty
Paranormal
Partisan mind-set
Placebo effect
Prejudice
Premonitions
Procrastination
Provincialism
Prudence
Pseudoscience
Rationalization
Scapegoats
Self-deception
Sense of proportion
Stereotypes
Superstitions
Suppression
Wishful-thinking
III.
Chapter Summary
In this Chapter the authors note that good reasoning is a matter of character as well as
brain power, and that there are psychological impediments to cogent reasoning.
The first such impediments that the authors discuss are those of loyalty to ones own ingroup and the herd-instinct that tends to keep our beliefs within the limits of what society
as a whole will accept. This is related to provincialism, the tendency to identify with the
ideas, interests, and kinds of behavior favored by those in groups with which we identify.
They also note that there is a tendency of practices and beliefs to persist long after the
conditions that made them useful have gonea condition that is termed culture lag.
Loyalty and provincialism often lead to prejudice, and to thinking in terms of
unverified stereotypes that support prejudicial beliefs. Prejudice is also reinforced by the
need for scapegoatsothers we can blame for the ills of the world. Moreover, the authors
49
note, thinking in terms of stereotypes and scapegoats often results from a partisan mindset.
People also have superstitious beliefs which are generally based on biased evidence
or small or unrepresentative samples. These beliefsalong with those that result from the
tendencies outlined aboveoften lead to beliefs that do not accord with reality. Beliefs
acquired in these nonrational ways often result from wishful thinking, or from selfdeception, or delusion.
The authors note that one of the most common types of self-deception is
rationalization, which often leads to procrastination. They also note that although we are
often aware of when we engage in these behaviors, we are not so well aware of other
psychological strategies that we use to avoid negative emotions. We are, for example,
often not aware when we engage in suppression or denial.
The authors recognize that their account of these psychological procedures faces
objections, one of which is that such a harmful device as, for example, self-deception
could not have evolved. In response to this they outline the advantages that could accrue
to a person who engages in self-deception, wishful thinking, and denial.
The authors then turn to discuss pseudoscience and the paranormal, addressing the
question of why theories based on such have such widespread credence despite their
failure to produce positive results. They also address the issue of why so many people
lack a good sense of proportion, and hence lack prudence.
IV.
Practice Questions
A.Objective Multiple Choice
50
1. The instinct that tends to keep our beliefs within the bounds of what society as a
whole will accept is the
a.
b.
c.
d.
Maternal instinct
Herd instinct
Social instinct
Survival instinct
2. The tendency of practices to persist after they have lost their usefulness is term
a.
b.
c.
d.
Culture lag
Jet lag
Denial
Suppression
Denial
Delusion
Stereotyping
Provincialism
Stagnation
Delusion
Prejudice
Violence
b. Politicians
c. Scapegoats
d. Criminals
8. Shirley Jacksons story The Lottery illustrates
a.
b.
c.
d.
Prejudice
Stereotypes
Scapegoating
Fallacious reasoning
9. The tendency to see our side as right and the other side as wrong is
a.
b.
c.
d.
Racist
A deluded mind-set
Accurate
A partisan mind-set
Cogent reasoning
Fallacious reasoning
Loyalty
Good sense
Some evidence
Prejudice
Revelation
Economics
Superstitious belief
Atheist belief
Cogent reasoning
Economic thinking
13. When we believe what we would like to be true, no matter what the evidence, we
engage in
a.
b.
c.
d.
Procrastination
Suppression
Deluded thinking
Wishful thinking
52
Amusing
Delusion
Denial
Procrastination
Gamble
Hide
Deceive ourselves
Face reality
17. The authors hold that perhaps the most common form of self-deception is
a.
b.
c.
d.
Denial
Procrastination
Rationalization
Prejudice
Prejudice
Stereotypes
Procrastination
Anxiety
Medication
Suppression
Prejudice
Self-knowledge
20. We can avoid the anxiety associated with a stress-invoking situation by engaging in
a. Suppression
53
b. Prejudice
c. Cogent reasoning
d. Fallacious reasoning
B.True/False
1. Beliefs sometimes linger in a culture after they have outlived their usefulness.
2. The herd instinct never leads people to do bad things.
3. Because prejudices are associated with group loyalty they can be good things.
4. Superstitions are well-founded on good evidence.
5. Superstitions are often based on some evidence.
6. We all feel loyalty to our in-group.
7. Scapegoats are responsible for the ills of the world.
8. Coincidences never happen.
9. Tomorrow will be another day is often used to justify procrastination.
10. The Spanish procrastinate more than other people.
11. AIDS is harmless.
12. Self-deception has no benefits.
13. Long-term anxiety is good for the human body.
14. Pseudoscientific theories sometimes produce good results.
15. There is good evidence in favor of extra-sensory perception.
C.Fill-in-the Blanks
1. A coincidence that occurs between someones thoughts and actual events is called a
______ .
2. It is difficult to explain why people lack ______ .
3. Thinking that Friday 13th is unlucky is a ______ .
54
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. b
2. a
3. d
4. b
5. c
6. b
7. c
8. c
9. d
10. b
11. a
12. a
13. d
14. b
15. a
16. c
17. c
56
18. c
19. b
20. a
B.True/False
1. T
2. F
3. F
4. F
5. T
6. T
7. F
8. F
9. T
10. F
11. F
12. F
13. F
14. F
15. F
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Premonition
2. Good sense of proportion
3. Superstition
4. Rationalization
5. Barnum
6. Prudence
7. Character
8. Provincialism
9. Self-deception
10. Suppression
57
CHAPTER 7
LANGUAGE
I.
II.
Fine-print disclaimers
Frames
Gobbledegook
Innuendo
Jargon
Legalese
Militaryese
Newspeak
Obfuscation
Padding
Politically correct
Reinterpretation ploy
Sexist language
Slanting
Suggestion
Tone
Weasel words
III.
Chapter Summary
In this Chapter the authors outline some of the ways that language can be used in the
service of fallacious arguments.
They begin by noting that words can have both cognitive meaning and emotive
meaning, with the latter meaning that they can have either positive or negative
connotations. That words can have emotive meanings has been used by many people to
further their own ends, for example through the use of doublespeak, or euphemistic
language.
Other common rhetorical devices including choosing the tone with which to
communicate in, slanting a true sentence so as to imply or suggest something else that is
usually false or known not to be true, the use of weasel words, the use of fine-print
disclaimers and obfuscation.
The authors also note that whereas sometimes language manipulation is benign, it can
be used to undermine the rights of others. They note that sometimes calling something by
59
a well-chosen name is crucial if one wants to bend the law in ones favor, or to adopt
certain policies.
Noting that languages are living and changing, they all undergo revision on a regular
basis. For example, the change in attitudes towards women and minority groups in
reflected in revisions of sexist language, and the use of politically correct locutions.
IV Practice Questions
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. Words always have
a.
b.
c.
d.
Cognitive meaning
Letters
Emotive meaning
Vowels
Cognitive meaning
Letters
Emotive meaning
Vowels
Healthy beer
American beer
Non-alcoholic beer
Watered-down beer
b. Firm
c. Malleable
d. Gullible
6. In 2006 the Israelis used the term realignment to mean
a.
b.
c.
d.
Attack
Retreat
Reduction
Negotiation
Doublespeak
Hitkansut
Jargon
Technical
Peace
Conflict
Saturation
Relocation
9. Euphemistic language
a.
b.
c.
d.
10. In 2008, President Bush used these terms as euphemisms for recession
a.
b.
c.
d.
11. Padding
a.
b.
c.
d.
61
Tone
Misrepresentation
Generational bias
Prejudice
Innuendo
Bias
Tone
Lying
Dishonest
Misleading
Unread
Illegal
17. When a politician reinterprets what he has said in the past, he or she is using
a.
b.
c.
d.
b. Galvanized
c. Indistinct
d. Undignified
19. Obfuscation can involve
a.
b.
c.
d.
Evasion
Vulcanization
Lying
Cogency
Artificially created
Artifically sustained
Artifically controlled
Artifically revised
B.True/False
1. All languages are artificial products.
2. Many words have cognitive and emotive meaning.
3. The same word can carry both positive and negative connotations.
4. Weasel words are named after the eating habits of weasels.
5. Preemptive action is a euphemism for our side attacking first.
6. Waterboarding is a harmless water sport.
7. According to Orwell, language can corrupt thought.
8. The principal reason for legal terminology is to ensure certainty.
9. When someone is vocationally relocated they are fired.
10. The Republican climate change is the Democrat global warming.
11. Selective reduction is a euphemism for abortion.
12. Some words have neutral meanings.
63
13. Technical jargon used by people in the same field is an essential form of
communication.
14. Padding is a common feature of jargon.
15. Good writers ignore considerations of tone.
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. When a writer expresses attitudes or feelings in her work she is using ____ .
2. Appealing to the baser instincts is ______ .
3. Most U.S. textbooks _____ U.S. history.
4. Suggestion is a form of _____ .
5. Employers can avoid paying people the minimum wage by classifying them as ____.
6. Susan Anthony holds that the use of the word _____ is symptomatic of the erosion of
cultural standards.
7. Thomas Szasz holds that there is no such thing as _____ .
8. Mental structures that shape the way we see the world are _____ .
9. English undergoes _____ on a regular basis.
10. Sexist locutions tend to introduce _______ into our minds.
D.Essay Questions
1. Should the government encourage or require people to use certain types of language
to get them to think in certain ways? For example, should it require that people use
non-sexist language to get them to think in non-sexist ways? Do you think that this
would be ethical, or not? Do you think that it would be effective? Argue for your
views.
2. Read the quotation from Confucius Analects on p.151 of the textbook. Do you agree
use indicates an acceptance of certain values that need not be described accurately as
dumbing down? In each case, argue for your view.
4. Do you believe that fine-print disclaimers are problematic? After all, isnt it the
responsibility of a person signing a contract to know what they are agreeing to? Argue
for your view.
5. Write a newspaper editorial for a position that you (a) agree with, and (b) disagree
with, using the types of misleading language discussed in this Chapter to make your
point.
V.
65
VI.
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. b
2. c
3. d
4. d
5. b
6. b
7. a
8. b
9. b
10. a
11. a
12. c
13. b
14. a
15. a
16. c
17. b
18. c
19. a
20. c
B.True/False
1. F
2. T
3. T
4. T
5. T
6. F
7. T
8. T
9. T
10. T
11. T
12. T
13. T
14. T
15. F
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
66
1. Tone
2. Pandering
3. Sanitize
4. Slanting
5. Subcontractors
6. Folks
7. Mental illness
8. Frames
9. Revision
10. Sexist thoughts
CHAPTER 8
EVALUATING EXTENDED ARGUMENTS
I.
II.
Charity
Comparison of Alternatives
Essays
Evidence
Irony
Margin note and summary method
Objections
Objective
Principle of just deserts
Pro and con argument
Refutation to counterarguments
Subjective
Thesis
Value claims
III.
Chapter Summary
The main aim of this Chapter is the evaluation of essays that argue to a conclusion.
The authors outline a method of essay evaluation that starts with the reader finding
the thesis and keeping it in mind. She should then find the reasons that support the
thesis, and identify the evidence that is offered to support these reasons. The reader
should then identify responses offered in the essay to likely objections to it, skipping
whatever doesnt argue for or against the thesis. The reader should also try to add
relevant information or reasons to the argument, to make it the best one that they can
for the conclusion supported. She should also consider the authors use of tone or
emotive language, and then come to an evaluation of the essay in question. The reader
might employ the margin note and summary method to aid her in evaluating an
argument.
The authors note that evaluating value claims is different from evaluating factual
claims.
IV.
Practice Questions
68
Advertisements
Briefs
Newspapers
Essays
2. A thesis is
a.
b.
c.
d.
3. An essay that argues for a course of action by showing that likely alternatives are
less desirable is
a.
b.
c.
d.
4. An essay that weights the merits and demerits of a possible course of action is a
a. Pro and con argument
b. Con trick argument
c. Professional argument
d. Fallacious argument
5. The first thing the authors suggest one do in evaluating an essay is
a.
b.
c.
d.
Conclusions
Premises
Extensions
Evidence
69
a.
b.
c.
d.
8. Flavoring material
a. Makes essay reading more fun, but shouldnt influence the assessment of an
argument
b. Makes essay reading more fun, and is relevant to the argument
c. Makes essay reading tedious, and is relevant to the argument
d. Is a form of fallacious reasoning
9. When considering tone and emotive language a reader should
a.
b.
c.
d.
Reject it
Accept it
Come to an evaluation of it
Refrain from evaluating it
Assumptions
Premises
Thesis
Introductions
14. Poems
a.
b.
c.
d.
15. The margin note and summary method requires the summary to be
a.
b.
c.
d.
Marginal
Long
Accurate
Extended
17. According to the authors many philosophers claim that value judgments concern
matters that are
a. Objective
b. Subjective
c. Valuable
d. Trivial
18. Judgments about alleged facts are
a.
b.
c.
d.
Objective
Subjective
Valuable
Trivial
19. The idea that one should reap as one sows is based on
a.
b.
c.
d.
71
a.
b.
c.
d.
B.True/False
1. Moral claims are necessarily subjective.
2. Factual claims are necessarily objective.
3. Philosophers agree on what is objective and what is subjective.
4. Extended arguments are often fallacious.
5. Tone is irrelevant in assessing extended arguments.
6. Essays often provide a refutation to counterarguments.
7. This chapter applies only to written arguments.
8. The main conclusion of an essay is the primary premise.
9. Swift believed that we should eat Irish children.
10. The reader should never try to make the argument she is evaluating as strong
as possible.
11. One should always assess the weakest form of the argument one is
considering.
12. The readers background beliefs are important in assessing an argument.
13. Poems never have conclusions.
14. We should rely on our gut instincts to assess an argument.
15. Clarence Darrow favored the death penalty.
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Simple _______ can be used to persuade.
2. Explaining something can be used to _____ .
72
D.Essay Questions
1. Write an evaluation of Swifts essay A Modest Proposal (a link to this is
contained in section V.B.) Do you agree with Swifts conclusion, or not? What
relevance could his arguments have for modern debates over welfare reform?
2. Find a poem that argues for a conclusion and evaluate it. Do you think that
arguing for a conclusion through a poem is more or less effective that arguing
for it in prose?
3. Do you believe that using pure narration to persuade people of a position is a
legitimate form of persuasion, or not? Explain your argument, and illustrate it
with samples of such narration.
4. Find an argumentative essay from a reputable newspaper such as the New
York Times and use the margin note and summary method to evaluate it.
Explain your evaluation, drawing on the techniques used for evaluating essays
discussed in this Chapter.
5. Find an argument that the authors of this textbook have themselves used
within it to persuade you to accept their views, and subject it to the techniques
discussed in this Chapter. Do you think that you should be persuaded by what
they have to say, or not? Can you see any irony in deciding that you should
not be persuaded by them after evaluating their arguments in this way?
V.
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
d
a
b
a
b
b
c
a
74
9. d
10. c
11. c
12. a
13. d
14. d
15. c
16. c
17. b
18. a
19. a
20. a
B.True/False
1. F
2. T
3. F
4. F
5. F
6. T
7. F
8. F
9. F
10. F
11. F
12. T
13. F
14. F
15. F
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Narration
2. Persuade others
3. Reasons/conclusions
4. Obvious
5. Locate the reasons offered for it
6. Supporting evidence
7. Relevant background information
8. Valid
9. Charity
10. Implied
75
CHAPTER 9
WRITING COGENT (AND PERSUASIVE) ESSAYS
I.
II.
Position
Rewrite
Transitions
Validity
Writing process
III.
Chapter Summary
This Chapter builds on Chapter 8 by providing an outline of how successfully to write
a cogent and effective essay. After outlining the writing process the authors begin by
describing an effective way to prepare to write a short argumentative essay of a
specific topic. With this in hand they move to offer advice concerning how to write
the essay. They note that argumentative essays are typically divided into three parts:
an introduction (which usually includes the thesis), the body of the essay, and a
conclusion. They note that one of the most difficult parts of writing an essay is
perhaps the provision of convincing evidence, and provide guidelines to do this
effectively. The Chapter contains several exercises designed to aid the student in
developing good writing techniques.
IV.
Practice Questions
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. According to the authors, writing is
a.
b.
c.
d.
Boring
Erotic
Character forming
Character destroying
8. Bertrand Russell
a.
b.
c.
d.
78
a.
b.
c.
d.
Bertrand Russell
George Bernard Shaw
F. L. Lucas
Clarence Darrow
10. Writing is
a.
b.
c.
d.
A convoluted process
A straightforward process
A simple process
A boring process
13. The support that one must give to ones thesis will depend on
a. how resistant the intended audience is likely to be, or how much space one has
to make ones case
b. how resistant the audience is likely to be, only
c. how much space one has to make ones case, only
d. how fallaciously-persuasive one can be
14. The conclusion of an argumentative essay often
a.
b.
c.
d.
d. Specific
16. Personal experiences, the experiences of others, and authoritative sources are all
types of
a.
b.
c.
d.
Anecdotal evidence
Fallacious reasoning
Concrete evidence
Undocumented evidence
17. The words but, however, consider, and although are all
a.
b.
c.
d.
Antonyms
Transition terms
Premise indicators
Conclusion indicators
It is attractive to writers
Can be amusing
Can show what a writers background beliefs are
Can express ideas swiftly and effectively
Intuition
Inspiration
Theorizing
Practice
Anecdotes
Premises
Requirements
Persuaders
B.True/False
1. Experienced writers rarely know what theyre going to write about when they
start.
2. You should never change your mind.
80
10. In addition to the introduction and the conclusion, essays have a _____ .
D.Essay Questions
1. What are the advantages of essay writing, for the writer? The authors mention
some, but in addition to these you should offer at least three further advantages of
your own.
2. Can here ever be any disadvantages in writing essays? If you believe that there
can be, illustrate your argument with examples. If you believe that there cannot
be, develop at least three possible reasons why people might believe that there
are, and argue against them.
3. Take a paper that you have written for a previous class and write a critique of (a)
the method that you used to write it, and (b) its structure, basing your critique on
the discussions of this Chapter and the previous one.
4. Should we strive to have a completely literate population? Argue for your view.
5. Could you write an essay that was persuasive to every audience that could
encounter it? If not, what does this tell you about (a) the effectiveness of logic?
And (b) the human mind?
V.
http://www.staffs.ac.uk/schools/humanities_and_soc_sciences/philosophy/.resource/style.html
Pathways to Philosophy
http://www.philosophypathways.com/programs/pak4.html
Writing argumentative essays
http://www.rscc.cc.tn.us/owl&writingcenter/OWL/Argument.html
VI.
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. c
2. c
3. d
4. c
5. b
6. c
7. b
8. b
9. a
10. a
11. a
12. a
13. a
14. a
15. d
16. c
17. b
18. d
19. d
20. b
B.True/False
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
F
F
F
T
F
T
83
7. T
8. T
9. F
10. F
11. F
12. F
13. T
14. F
15. F
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Truth
2. Audience
3. Background beliefs
4. Reasoning
5. Learning
6. Linear
7. Revision
8. Best
9. Three
10. Body
CHAPTER 10
84
II.
Puffery
Qualitative research
Quantitative research
Sensory overload
Suppression of evidence
Ubiquitous ads
Weasel words
Whitewash
III.
Chapter Summary
Starting with the observation that advertising is obviously useful, the authors move in
this Chapter to discuss how advertisements manipulate consumer attitudes to sell
products.
The authors note that almost all advertisements are of two basic kinds: promise
advertisements, and identification advertisements. They then list a series of things to
watch out for in advertisements, noting that none is immune to the influence of
advertisements, and so it makes sense to become familiar with advertising devices.
With these points in hand the authors note that ads invite us to reason fallaciously, and
that they pound home slogans and meaningless jargon. They also play on weaknesses,
emotions, prejudices, and fears, and employ sneaky rhetoric, such as weasel words.
Ads also draw on trendy issues in the news, play to patriotism and loyalty, and
whitewash corporate imagery. They are now, the authors note, plastered all over the
place, and this can lead to sensory overload. The authors then observe that while
deceptive advertising is not legal, puffery is. The authors observe, too, that some ads
attempt to educate us or to warn us against harmful activities.
The authors then turn to discuss various marketing strategies, distinguishing
between quantitative and qualitative marketing research, and discussing internet
advertising and political advertising. Here, they discuss the role of election polls in
86
Practice Questions
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. According to the authors, ads often
a.
b.
c.
d.
Amuse
Lie
Mislead
Promise
Easy
Profitable
Centralized
Localized
45-60
18-49
18-25
21-49
Criminal
Misleading
Devious
Inventive
5. Promise advertising
a.
b.
c.
d.
87
a.
b.
c.
d.
Deceit
Darkness
Promises
Paternalism
Familiar
Interesting
Human
Novel
28%
30%
67%
126%
Family life
Employment choices
Libido
Preferences
Invidious comparison
Fallacious comparison
Straw man comparison
False cause comparison
88
13. Being the official supplier to X only means that a company has
a. Supplied more of its products to X than others
b. Has an agreement with X to supply its products
c. Is chosen by X more often than other companies
d. Has paid to be associated with X
14. According to the authors, the term best in advertising simply means
a.
b.
c.
d.
Underwear
Eggs
Toilet paper
Newspapers
Consumer fraud
Political corruption
Price-fixing
Negligent homicide
b. Market research
c. Market placement
d. Deception
20. Quantitative research gathers information by
a.
b.
c.
d.
B.True/False
1. Qualitative research grew out of Freuds theory of the unconscious.
2. The object of market research is the low-income consumer.
3. Shopping cards gather useful information.
4. Even well-targeted ads sometimes miss their mark owing to consumer
ignorance.
5. Shopping malls can be marketing tools.
6. Advertisers are starting to focus on individualized marketing strategies.
7. Demand by patients is the most common reason physicians give for
inappropriate prescriptions.
8. Pharmaceutical advertising is entirely benign.
9. Google makes a lot of money from advertising.
10. Advertising is never useful.
11. Franklin Roosevelt conducted radio fireside chats.
12. The first presidential candidate to make full use of television was Eisenhower.
13. Negative campaigning has been honed to a fine art.
14. Thomas Jefferson was derided because he didnt enlist in 1775.
15. Rapid response ads are often ineffective.
90
C.Fill-in-the Blanks
1. There are no legal consequences for _____ in political campaigns.
2. Family names in politics can act like _____ .
3. In all of the presidential debates so far it has been _____ that has determined
the outcome.
4. _____ tell political candidates how to advertise.
5. _____ is a politicians principal task while campaigning.
6. _____ presidents have an advantage in gaining media attention through press
conferences.
7. Nowadays even _____ are marketed.
8. ______ is still the mainstay for campaign advertising.
9. The dictator in 1984 is called _______ .
10. Virtually all ads are of ____ kinds.
D.Essay Questions
1. Given that advertising is expensive, politicians need to spend large sums of
money to run successful campaigns, often involving misleading advertising.
Do you think that the time has come to allow then directly t buy votes from
voters, thus reducing the need to mislead in this way? After all, they need to
buy votes anyway through advertising, so why not do it directly?
2. Choose one advertisement run in favor of a Democrat, and one in favor of a
Republican, and criticize each of them, drawing on the discussion of this
Chapter.
3. Find advertisements that illustrate each of the fallacies discussed in this
volume, and explain why they represent the fallacies you attribute to them.
4. Which do you think is worse: misleading political advertisements, or
misleading commercial advertisements? Explain your answer.
5. Develop an argument in favor of advertising, making sure that it conforms
with the advice offered in the previous chapter.
91
V.
VI.
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. c
2. b
3. b
92
4. d
5. c
6. c
7. a
8. a
9. b
10. d
11. c
12. a
13. d
14. a
15. b
16. a
17. b
18. a
19. b
20. a
B.True/False
1. T
2. F
3. T
4. F
5. T
6. T
7. T
8. F
9. T
10. F
11. T
12. T
13. T
14. T
15. F
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Mudslinging
Brands
Image
Polls
Image building
Incumbent
93
7. Wars
8. Television
9. Big Brother
10. Two
CHAPTER 11
MANAGING THE NEWS
I.
Internet
Lack of proportion
Media
Misdirection
Misleading
News-gathering
News-reporting
Non-mass media
Objective
Opinionated
Opinions
Power
Self-censorship
Sensational
Sitcoms
Slant
Sound bite
Subjective
Television
Think-tanks
Unusual
III.
Chapter Summary
The news media is going through a huge transformation, in part for economic
reasons. This transformation means that people need to be even more vigilant in
thinking critically about the way the news is presented.
The authors begin this Chapter by discussing the media and the power of money.
They note that the chief source of news for most people are still the mass media,
which exist to make money. Since this is so, their consumers have a lot of say in what
is presented in the mass media. Advertisers also have power over the mass media, and
so they cater to their interests; the same is true of government influence over the mass
media, which can restrict the freedom of the press in many different ways. The media,
however, are also powerful, and frequently share common interests. Similarly, the
authors note, other Big Business have power over the mass media, while they
96
continue to note that power tends to cooperate with power, and so the various power
factions tend to cooperate rather than to fight. Because money is the bottom line for
the mass media, and vested interests shape the news to their advantage, and the public
wants entertainment more than information, news tends to turn into stories.
The authors discuss how news-gathering methods are designed to save money,
and that the mass medias presentation of news tends to focus on what the powerful
want to tell us, and on news with entertainment value. As such, news stories tend to
involve misdirection and lack of proportion.
The authors then turn to discuss the theory and practice of news gathering. In
theory, the unusual is news, while the everyday is not, although, the authors note,
what happens everyday is generally more important. They also note that news
reporting is supposed to be objective, not subjective, although even news that tries to
be unbiased cannot be completely objective. News is also supposed to be distinct
from analysis and in-depth reporting, which can sometimes lead to a lack of
explanatory value, while the right experts are often those that are consulted, and are
chosen to ensure that their opinions will not be unpopular with the powerful.
Occasionally, journalists engage in self-censorship.
The authors discuss several devices that are used to slant the news, including
playing up or down stories, the use of misleading, sensational, or opinionated
headlines, the selective use of images to slant the news, and the omission of playing
down of follow-up stories. The authors also note that points of view can be conveyed
by cartoons and comic strips.
They then discuss television, film, and electronic information sources, noting that
television has considerable power to change the world, and that it is the best source of
news for many people. They also discuss the way that the Internet is a good source of
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useful information, and applaud the useful of the non-mass market media as sources
of information. They conclude the Chapter with a discussion of recent developments.
IV.
Practice Questions
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. The news media is currently going through
a.
b.
c.
d.
A crisis
A transformation
A period of excitement
A period of quiet
Pests
Spoilers
Nonprofessionals
Dilettantes
News blogs
Youtube
The mass media
Radio
Light-hearted material
Important material
Foreign news
Political news
a.
b.
c.
d.
Are superstitious
Are libertarian
Are ecologically aware
Are financially astute
Conservative bias
Liberal bias
Short attention spans
Long attention spans
Television news
Radio news
Newspapers
Internet news sites
Levies fines
Censors
Closes down stations
Blacklists celebrities
11. For failing to identify her source in the Scooter Libby trial reporter Judith
Miller
a.
b.
c.
d.
Was fired
Was fined $10,000
Served three months in jail
Served two years in jail
15. FAIR is
a.
b.
c.
d.
A media watchdog
A media network
A trade organization
A liberal think-tank
Information
Anxiety
Entertainment
Misinformation
Beats
Leaks
Investigative reporting
Eavesdropping
a.
b.
c.
d.
B.True/False
1. The theory that news reporting should be objective requires all the news to be
reported.
2. National security never takes precedence over objective reporting.
3. It is not useful to know the political orientation of think tanks.
4. Self-censorship is automatically evil, according to the authors.
5. The most obvious way to bury the news is to ignore it.
6. Misleading headlines cannot be used.
7. Opinionated headlines can be used.
8. Comic strips never make points graphically.
9. Comic strips are immune from censorship.
10. Television is the most important of the mass media.
11. Television influenced the conduct of the Gulf war.
12. Extra! is a media watchdog.
13. Human interest tends to crowd out important matters.
14. The media are beholden to advertisers.
15. Government has the right to regulate business activity.
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C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Government often has the ______ to regulate business activity.
2. The US Government can censor news deemed to be _____ .
3. Possibly the most influential network in the Middle East is _____ .
4. When labor union stories are reported in the press they often have a
_____bias.
5. One section of society given short shrift in the media is the _____ .
6. News-gathering methods are designed to _____ ______ .
7. Very few news stories are from ______ ______ .
8. Theory says that news is what is ______ .
9. Theory says what is _______is not news.
10. News cannot be completely _____ .
D.Essay Questions
1. Assess the authors arguments concerning self-censorship. Do you believe that
they are correct? If so, outline three possible objections to them, and show
how they may be met, If not, argue against their views cogently and
persuasively.
2. Do you believe that the Government should be allowed to regulate commerce?
If yes, to what degree? If not, why not? Argue for your view.
3. Do you think that the proliferation of citizen journalists is a good thing, or
not? Since they often do not abide by the canons of journalism, do you think
they could add to misinformation, even if unwittingly? If so, is this a
problem? Argue for your view.
4. Should journalists be licensed? If so, whyand who would grant the licenses,
and on what basis? If not, why not? Argue for your position.
5. Should a person be allowed to publish information that could be harmful to
large numbers of innocent people, such as information about how to make a
bomb? Argue for your view.
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V.
VI.
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. b
2. a
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3. c
4. c
5. a
6. a
7. c
8. a
9. a
10. a
11. c
12. a
13. b
14. d
15. a
16. c
17. a
18. b
19. c
20. a
B.True/False
1. F
2. F
3. F
4. F
5. T
6. F
7. T
8. F
9. F
10. T
11. T
12. T
13. T
14. T
15. T
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Power
Obscene
Al-Jazeera
Negative
Poor
Save money
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7. Investigative reporting
8. Unusual
9. Commonplace
10. Objective
CHAPTER 12
TEXTBOOKS: MANAGING WORLDVIEWS
I
III
Chapter Summary
The authors begin this Chapter by discussing high school history textbooks. After
noting that the quality of high school history textbooks has improved significantly
since about 1960, they then list the bad news about them, including the fact that they
106
are dull and overly long, that they have been dumbed down, that they have gone
overboard on multiculturalism, that they distort American history and sanitize United
States history, and that embarrassing facts and topics are omitted or downplayed.
They then turn to social studies (civics) textbooks, noting that they minimize the
gulf between theory and practice. With this in hand, they discuss textbooks and
indoctrination, and then textbooks and politics. They discuss how textbooks are
selected, the power of big business concerning textbooks, how authors influence
textbook content, and note that students have little influence over textbook content.
After noting that it is very difficult in particular cases to determine if a book has
been censored, they discuss the issue of censorship through the lens of the controversy
concerning the teaching of evolution, noting that Americans are astonishingly resistant
to accepting this theory as a bedrock idea of science. They note that it is no surprise
that publishers engage in self-censorship, and note too that nontextbooks also often are
censored.
The authors observe that textbooks fail to give students genuine understanding,
and conclude with a postscript on college texts.
IV
Practice Questions
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. The quality of history textbooks has improved since
a.
b.
c.
d.
1930
1940
1950
1960
a.
b.
c.
d.
3. The forced move of the Cherokee Indians to Oklahoma was called the
a.
b.
c.
d.
Trail of Lies
Trail of Tears
Trail of Feathers
Trail of Trials
Voice
Facts
Relevance
Blacks
Dumbed down
Sanitized
Both dumbed down and sanitized
Sanitized but not dumbed down
More bloodthirsty
Less relevant
Politically correct
Monocultural
d. Deliberately deceive
9. The teddy bear is named after
a.
b.
c.
d.
Theodore Drake
Theodore Roosevelt
Theodore Washington
Theodora Duncan
An expert chessplayer
A fallacious reasoned
A bloodthirsty bigot
An ideal President
Irangate
Whitewatergate
Postgate
Contragate
Mathematics
Gambling
Bomber pilots
Ground troops
The truth
Discussions of past glories
Pictures of dead soldiers
Criticism of past events
Disaffected citizens
Educated citizens
Welfare
Education
109
a.
b.
c.
d.
On a federal level
On a national level
On a city level
On a local level
Bribery
Lobbying
Ignorance
Prejudice
18. In times past, funds spent by school boards in America came from
a.
b.
c.
d.
State government
Federal government
Private donors
Property taxes
Ohio
Texas
Massachusetts
Louisiana
Straightforwardly
By pussyfooting around it
By ignoring it
Deceitfully
B.True/False
1. In Texas, by law textbooks cannot encourage lifestyles that deviate from
accepted standards of society.
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8. Since September 11th, 2001 textbooks have been wary of discussing ____ .
9. United States history is _____ in many textbooks.
10. Embarrassing topics are ______ .
D.Essay Questions
1. Is it possible to write a textbook that presents an impartial view of history?
Support your answer argumentatively.
2. Shouldnt children be protected from certain forms of unpleasantness, such as
violence or prejudice? If so, doesnt this support censoring textbooks to help
achieve this? Critically evaluate this view, coming to a conclusion either for or
against it that it supported by reasons.
3. If public schools are funded by taxpayer money, shouldnt taxpayers have a
say in what is taught? And, if so, shouldnt they be allowed to remove the
teaching of things that they do not agree withsuch as the theory of
evolution? Critically evaluate this view, coming to a conclusion either for or
against it that it supported by reasons.
4. Would it be better to eliminate state funded education altogether to avoid the
types of indoctrination that the authors discuss? Argue for your view.
5. Should we require all children to undergo a uniform curriculum to ensure
some degree of national cohesion and shared knowledge? Argue for whether
you think this would be a good idea or a bad idea.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/
Wikipedia: Creation and evolution in public education
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creation_and_evolution_in_public_education
Milton Friedman: Public SchoolsMake Them Private
http://www.cato.org/pubs/briefs/bp-023.html
Public school vs. private school
http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/market-movers/2008/06/06/the-publicschool-vs-private-school-debate
Brian Leiter on textbook censorship
http://www.utexas.edu/law/news/2003/072503_bleiter.html
VI
Answer Key
A.Objective Multiple Choice
1. d
2. d
3. b
4. c
5. a
6. c
7. c
8. c
9. b
10. c
11. a
12. c
13. c
14. a
15. d
16. b
17. b
18. d
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19. b
20. b
B.True/False
1. T
2. F
3. T
4. T
5. T
6. T
7. F
8. T
9. F
10. T
11. T
12. F
13. T
14. T
15. T
C.Fill-in-the-Blanks
1. Neglected
2. Fit into the adult world
3. Politics
4. California/Texas
5. Homosexuals
6. Student health
7. Politically correct
8. Islam
9. Sanitized
10. Played down
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